Showing posts with label Business Metrics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Business Metrics. Show all posts

Friday, April 6, 2018

Understanding YOUR Social Media Analytics?


Social Media Analytics

Social media analytics is the practice of gathering data from social media websites and analyzing that data using social media analytics tools to make business decisions.



The most common use of social media analytics is to mine customer sentiment to support marketing and customer service activities.

The first step in a social media intelligence initiative is to determine which business goals the data that is gathered and analyzed will benefit. Typical objectives include increasing revenues, reducing customer service costs, getting feedback on products and services, and improving public opinion of a particular product or business division.

Once the business goals have been identified, businesses should define key performance indicators (KPIs) to objectively evaluate the business analytics data.



Metrics To Track

Business metrics derived from social media analytics may include customer engagement, which could be measured by the number of followers for a Twitter account and number of retweets and mentions of a company's name. With social media monitoring, businesses can also look at how many people follow their presence on Facebook and the number of times people interact with their social profile by sharing or liking their posts.

More advanced types of social media analysis involve sentiment analytics. This practice involves sophisticated natural-language-processing machine learning algorithms parsing the text in a person's social media post about a company to understand the meaning behind that person's statement. These algorithms can create a quantified score of the public's feelings toward a company based on social media interactions and give reports to management on how well the company interacts with customers.



Popular Tools

There are a number of types of social media analytics tools for analyzing unstructured data found in tweets and Facebook posts. In addition to text analysis, many enterprise-level social media analytics tools will harvest and store the data.

Some of these tools come from niche players, while more traditional enterprise analytics software vendors offer packages dedicated to social media intelligence.

As more social media analytics rely on machine learning, popular open platforms like R, Python and TensorFlow serve as social media analytics tools.



Importance of Social Media Analytics

There is a tremendous amount of information in social media data. In decades past, enterprises paid market research companies to poll consumers and conduct focus groups to get the kind of information that consumers now willingly post to public social media platforms.

The problem is this information is in the form of free text and natural language, the kind of unstructured data that analytics algorithms have traditionally. But as machine learning and artificial intelligence have advanced, it's become easier for businesses to quantify in a scalable way the information in social media posts.

This allows enterprises to extract information about how the public perceives their brand, what kind of products consumers like and dislike and generally where markets are going. Social media analytics makes it possible for businesses to quantify all this without using less reliable polling and focus groups.



Guest Authored By Margaret Rouse. Margaret Rouse writes for and manages WhatIs.com, TechTarget’s IT encyclopedia and learning center. She is responsible for building content that helps IT professionals learn to speak each other’s highly specialized languages.

WhatIs.com has won many awards over the years and has been cited as an authority in major publications such as the New York Times, Time Magazine, USA Today, The Washington Times, the Miami Herald, ZDNet, PC Magazine and Discovery Magazine. Before joining TechTarget in 2000 when they acquired WhatIs.com, Margaret worked for New York State Model Schools, teaching computer science and technology integration. Follow Margaret Rouse on Twitter.





"There is a tremendous amount of information in social media data.

In decades past, enterprises paid market research companies to poll consumers and conduct focus groups to get the kind of information that consumers now willingly post to public social media platforms.." -MargaretRouse


    • Post Crafted By:
      Fred Hansen Pied Piper of Social Media Marketing at YourWorldBrand.com & CEO of Millennium 7 Publishing Co. in Loveland, Colorado. I work deep in the trenches of social media strategy, community management and trends.  My interests include; online business educator, social media marketing, new marketing technology, skiing, hunting, fishing and The Rolling Stones..-Not necessarily in that order ;)